Unapologetically Sensitive

US 185 How to Identify a Healthy Relationship

04.04.2023 - By Patricia YoungPlay

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How to Identify a Healthy Relationship GUEST Lindsay Gibson, PsyD. EPISODE OVERVIEW Dr. Lindsay Gibson, author of Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents describes healthy relationships look like, and she identifies characteristics of a person who is capable of having a healthy relationship. She talks about what to look for at the beginning of a relationship. She also talks about deal breakers and red flags, and why people who had unhappy childhoods tend to get involved with difficult partners. She explains why it can be hard to end a relationship that isn’t working. HIGHLIGHTS ·         Emotional Immaturity—These people respond like young children or adolescents.  They lack empathy and are not able to see things from another’s point of view.  They lack the ability to self-regulate and they are NOT self-reflective.  They have a strong sense of self, but not of others.  There may be attachment injuries, and a secure attachment is essential to develop a healthy sense of self. ·         What are elements of a healthy relationship? ·         The relationship supports and builds the energy and individuality of each person ·         One has the ability to be empathic—you can imagine your internal experience and the internal experience of the other ·         One is interested in their partner, their well-being, they enjoy their partner’s success and are supportive ·         One is willing to learn ·         One keeps it interesting ·         What are some personality characteristics of a person who is capable of a healthy relationship? ·         One is sensitive and can tune in to the other person ·         One’s personality is complex enough to support individuality (the partner doesn’t have to think, believe, act, do things exactly like the other person to make them feel secure) ·         One automatically takes the other person into account ·         One is able to take turns with problem-solving, compromise ·         One is creative and resilient ·         One knows their own needs and preference and can voice them ·         One can tolerate conflict ·         One can be vulnerable ·         One can manage having competing needs ·         Mature coping mechanisms like humor, or asking for support ·         Why are some people aware of their unhappy childhoods, yet they find themselves involved with difficult people in their adult relationships? ·         HSPs have great insight and great memories ·         HSPs are altruistic and function at a high level ·         If a person doesn’t do the emotional work to heal from childhood, they recognize the patterns, but continue to engage in relationships/patterns that don’t work ·         You must have the emotional experience of what happened to you in childhood ·         When one hasn’t done the emotional work, one doesn’t have the gut feeling or instinct that informs one that this isn’t healthy ·         What signs should a person look for at the beginning of a relationship in order to assess its potential for becoming a healthy relationship? ·         One feels fully seen ·         One is even tempered ·         One is able to own and accept their mistakes ·         One has the ability to apologize and make amends ·         One has the capacity to receive ·         One is enjoyable, playful, has a sense of humor ·         There is a realistic and reliable foundation ·         One can work with reality and they try and understand what’s going on ·         One can think and feel at the same time (one’s brain doesn’t get hijacked with emotion) ·         One can be reasoned with ·         One is respectful of boundaries—if you set a boundary, one might be curious about it (but not defensive or try and push the boundary) ·         One doesn’t psychoanalyze or label or call names (sensitive, overreacting, emotional, unreliable, etc.) ·         One can talk from a feeling place ·         One won’t tell you how you should be feelings ·         One can wait and be patient ·         One can handle stress well (if you see impatience and irritability in the beginning BEWARE!) ·         What are the biggest red flags that indicate that you might be getting involved with an Emotionally Immature Person? ·         You feel like you can’t completely be yourself ·         Not opening up, not completely at ease, watching yourself ·         Your thoughts are scrambled ·         You don’t think as clearly or concisely ·         The person has a history of conflictual relationships, and tends to see themselves as a victim or a rescuer ·         What are deal breakers in any close relationship? ·         If you’re doing a lot of the work, and you can’t communicate your feelings, and you don’t feel safe or confident with the other person ·         The other person is constantly telling you that you’re the problem ·         Why is it difficult to end a difficult relationship? ·         We bond with others for a sense of survival. ·         It’s familiar and there is emotional intensity (this isn’t necessarily a positive attribute) ·         The more emotional stimulation (even if it’s negative—fighting, abuse), the tighter the bonding  GUEST BIO  Lindsay Gibson, PsyD. has been a licensed clinical psychologist for over thirty years and specializes in individual adult psychotherapy with adult children of emotionally immature parents. She is the author of four books. Her book Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents remains a #1 Amazon Best Seller. The follow up to this book is Recovering from Emotionally Immature Parents, and the 2nd edition of her first book Who You Were Meant To Be has been recently released on Amazon. Her latest book, Self Care for Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents, was just released in September 2021. In the past Dr. Gibson has served as an adjunct assistant professor teaching doctoral psychology students.  PODCAST HOST Patricia is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker, and Coach.  She knows what it’s like to feel like an outcast, misfit, and truthteller.  Learning about the trait of being a Highly Sensitive Person (HSP), helped Patricia rewrite her history with a deeper understanding, appreciation, and a sense of self-compassion.  She created the podcast Unapologetically Sensitive to help other HSPs know that they aren’t alone, and that being an HSP has amazing gifts, and some challenges.  Patricia works online globally working individually with people, and she teaches Online Courses for HSPs that focus on understanding what it means to be an HSP, self-care, self-compassion, boundaries, perfectionism, mindfulness, communication, and creating a lifestyle that honors us LINKS  Dr, Gibson’s links Website— http://www.drlindsaygibson.com/ Patricia’s Links HSP Online Course--https://unapologeticallysensitive.com/hsp-online-groups/ Online HSP Course Materials (no group included) https://patriciayounglcsw.com/product-category/hsp-classes/ Receive the top 10 most downloaded episodes of the podcast-- https://www.subscribepage.com/e6z6e6 Sign up for the Newsletter-- https://www.subscribepage.com/y0l7d4 To write a review in itunes: click on this link https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/unapologetically-sensitive/id1440433481?mt=2 select “listen on Apple Podcasts” chose “open in itunes” choose “ratings and reviews” click to rate the number of starts click “write a review” Website--www.unapologeticallysensitive.com Facebook-- https://www.facebook.com/Unapologetically-Sensitive-2296688923985657/ Closed/Private Facebook group Unapologetically Sensitive-- https://www.facebook.com/groups/2099705880047619/ Instagram-- https://www.instagram.com/unapologeticallysensitive/ Youtube-- https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOE6fodj7RBdO3Iw0NrAllg/videos?view_as=subscriber Tik Tok-- https://www.tiktok.com/@hsppodcast e-mail-- [email protected] Show hashtag--#unapologeticallysensitive Music-- Gravel Dance by Andy Robinson www.andyrobinson.com 

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